I will say if her attorneys argument is the machine takes ur money wen u lose u should recieve money wen u win as he is quoted in the article this woman will not win even a steak dinner. Perhaps only a legal bill

Regarding system glitches let me recount this little story: I had just come back from a vacation to Vegas and had $7000 in cash. I went to Chase bank to deposit the funds. There was a fairly long line so I decided to use the ATM machine. I put in the $7000 and the machine spit it back out to me with a message that said only 40 bills at a time could be deposited. I canceled the deposit and went through the procedure to get a new deposit started and ran into a couple of touchscreen problems. Then I separated the money into two approximately even stacks and submitted the two stacks into the machine. But when I got my receipt it stated that I had only made a $3500 deposit. I went to the bank manager and explained to him what happened and he started the procedure for an audit. I had to wait about four or five days, as I recall, until the issue was resolved. I made at least one call during the waiting period, and to be honest I was a little nervous about the outcome. (It wouldn't take much imagination for a scam artist to say that he made a $7000 deposit when he only deposited $3500.) But they found all my money. As I recall, the bank mentioned that when they check the ATM machine for funds in circumstances like this there are two employees present. Perhaps there are other safeguards like internal receipts and computer entries that verify accuracy.